Reoperative aortic root replacement remains associated with a high postoperative mortality. The need to perform unplanned coronary artery bypass grafting during reoperative aortic root replacement is a major risk factor for hospital death. The optimal technique for coronary reconstruction in this setting remains to be debated.
The transition area appears as a disease progression front characterized by microvessel formation and inflammatory cell infiltration. In contrast, increased vascular smooth muscle cell density in the maximal dilatation area suggests a healing process, although inefficient to prevent aortic dilatation.
The majority of ascending aortic aneurysms cannot be related to any specific etiology and should be qualified as idiopathic. The pathobiology of ascending aortic aneurysms remains incompletely understood. Data from direct study are still scarce and often limited because of patient heterogenicity. Currently available information suggests that destructive remodeling of the aortic wall, inflammation and angiogenesis, biomechanical wall stress, and molecular genetics are relevant mechanisms of idiopathic ascending aortic aneurysm formation and progression. Further understanding of these mechanisms will likely provide novel diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutical tools for the clinician.
TARR using mechanical valve grafts yields excellent survival results in selected patients. However, a high rate of minor thromboembolic events was recorded. Aspirin in combination with oral anticoagulants might be of potential interest in these patients.
Elastase application on rat ascending aortic adventitia produced aneurysms, creating a reproducible model. Aortic wall remodeling evolved toward an increase in total wall area, reproducing the main structural features of this disease in human beings.
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